Dig Deeper:

Dig Deeper:

Once you’ve identified the troublemakers, you can control them with an assortment of organic pest-control products.

Mealybugs

Pseudococcidae family

By Therese Ciesinski

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Description
Very small, oval-shaped white bugs. Egg sacs appear as a white, waxy fuzz along the stems and crotches of branches.

Where they live
Across the United States.

Their life cycle
A mealybug produces a new generation about every 30 days. Each egg sac may contain as many as 600 eggs.

Plants they attack
The mealybug is related to another houseplant pest called scale, and both thrive on a wide variety of indoor and outdoor species, including ficus, philodendron, coleus, fuchsia, begonia, citrus, fern, dracaena, ivy, and poinsettia.

Why they're a problem
They feed by sucking plant sap, which weakens the plant and causes leaf drop. They also excrete copious amounts of sticky "honeydew," leading to the growth of sooty mold.

Organic damage control

Start by isolating the infected plant. Spray as strong a stream of water as the plant can tolerate; this should dislodge most of the bugs. Repeat if you see new egg sacs.

Swab each mealybug with cotton saturated in rubbing alcohol, wait a couple of days, and then rinse the plant with water.

Spray with insecticidal soap.

The beneficial mealybug destroyer Cryptolaemus montrouzieri is useful in greenhouses and for severe infestations.